Medical Ultrasound Imaging
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Searchterm 'Microbubble' found in 78 articles
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SonoVue®
www.bracco.com/Bracco/Internet/Imaging/Ultrasound/ From Bracco Diagnostics, Inc.
SonoVue® was first launched in October 2001 and is now available in all European countries.
SonoVue is a second generation USCA, designed and optimized with regard to the resistance to pressure. SonoVue is an example of an important family of microbubbles whose membrane consists of phospholipids. SonoVue microbubbles are filled with sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), a gas which has a low solubility and diffuses slowly in blood for the gaseous phase of the microbubbles.
In particular, the SonoVue microbubbles, thanks to the high flexibility of their shell, are strongly echogenic in a wide range of frequencies and acoustic pressure and therefore can be used with both destructive and conservative contrast bubble specific imaging methods.

See also Coherent Contrast Imaging.
Drug Information and Specification
RESEARCH NAME
BR1
DEVELOPER
INDICATION -
DEVELOPMENT STAGE
APPLICATION
Intravenous
TYPE
Microbubble
Lipids: Macrogol 4000, DSPC, DPPG, Palmitic acid
CHARGE
Negative
Sulfurhexafluoride
MICROBUBBLE SIZE
99% < 11μm
PRESENTATION
Presentation 01(with integral Bio-Set transfer system) -25 mg of dry, lyophilized powder in an atmosphere of sulphur hexafluoride in a colorless Type I glass vial, with elastomeric closure and integral transfer system.Type I glass pre-filled syringe containing 5 ml sodium chloride 0.9%w/v solution for injection. - Presentation 02 (with separate MiniSpike transfer system)
STORAGE
No special precautions for storage
PREPARATION
Reconstitute with 5 ml saline
DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION PROVIDED HERE, THEY ARE
NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PACKAGE INSERT!
Distribution Information
TERRITORY
DISTRIBUTOR
USA, EU
History of Ultrasound Contrast Agents
The earliest introduction of vascular ultrasound contrast agents (USCA) was by Gramiak and Shah in 1968, when they injected agitated saline into the ascending aorta and cardiac chambers during echocardiographic to opacify the left heart chamber. Strong echoes were produced within the heart, due to the acoustic mismatch between free air microbubbles in the saline and the surrounding blood.
The disadvantage of this microbubbles produced by agitation, was that the air quickly leak from the thin bubble shell into the blood, where it dissolved. In addition, the small bubbles that were capable of traversing the capillary bed did not survive long enough for imaging because the air quickly dissipated into the blood. Aside from agitated saline, also hydrogen peroxide, indocyanine green dye, and iodinated contrast has been tested. The commercial development of contrast agents began in the 1980s with greatest effort to the stabilization of small microbubbles.

The development generations by now:
first generation USCA = non-transpulmonary vascular;;
second generation USCA = transpulmonary vascular, with short half-life (less than 5 min);
third generation USCA = transpulmonary vascular, with longer half-life (greater than 5 min).

To pass through the lung capillaries and enter into the systemic circulation, microspheres should be less than 10 μm in diameter. Air bubbles in that size range persist in solution for only a short time; too short for systemic vascular use.
The first developed agent was Echovist (1982), which enabled the enhancement of the right heart. The second generation of echogenic agents, sonicated 5% human albumin-containing air bubbles (Albunex), were capable of transpulmonary passage but often failed to produce adequate imaging of the left heart. Both Albunex and Levovist utilize air as the gas component of the microbubble.
In the 1990s newer developed agents with fluorocarbon gases and albumin, surfactant, lipid, or polymer shells have an increased persistence of the microspheres. This smaller, more stable microbubble agents, and improvements in ultrasound technology, have resulted in a wider range of application including myocardial perfusion.

See also First Generation USCA, Second Generation USCA, and Third Generation USCA.
Intermittent Imaging
Contrast microbubbles can be destroyed by intense ultrasound and the scattered signal level can increase abruptly for a short time during microbubble destruction, resulting in an acoustical flash (sudden increase in echogenicity).
Intermittent imaging with high acoustic output utilizes the properties of contrast microbubbles to improve blood-to-tissue image contrast by imaging intermittently at very low frame rates.
The frame rate is usually reduced to about one frame per second, or it is synchronized with cardiac cycles so that enough contrast microbubbles can flow into the imaging site where most microbubbles have been destroyed by the previous acoustic pulse. Because bubbles are destroyed by ultrasound, controlling the delay time between frames produces images whose contrast emphasizes regions with rapid blood flow rate or regions with high or low blood volume.
BG1135
From Bracco Research S. A., Geneva, Switzerland
BG1135 is a polymer-shelled new ultrasound contrast agent under development. The air-filled microsphere has a rigid, 100 nm thick polymeric shell and a mean diameter of 2.9 μm with 99% less than 8 μm.
The destruction mechanism of BG1135 is unique among microbubbles. The microbubbles of BG1135 appear to acquire a small shell defect, allowing the filling gas to stream out and creating a new gas bubble, but leaving the old shell intact. No significant differences between the diameters of the shells can be measured before and after insonation even though the agent is fragmented.

Drug Information and Specification
RESEARCH NAME
BG1135
DEVELOPMENT STAGE
Preclinical
APPLICATION
Intravenous
TYPE
Microbubble
Polymer
Air
MICROBUBBLE SIZE
Mean diameter: 2.9 μm
99% < 8 μm
DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION PROVIDED HERE, THEY ARE
NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PACKAGE INSERT!
Optison™
From GE Healthcare;;
Optison is the first 'second generation USCA' marketed in the US.
Ultrasound contrast agents used during an ultrasound imaging procedure, enable more accurate diagnosis of the patient's heart condition. The application of Optison allows to image the endocardial borders of the heart, to see cardiac wall motion abnormalities and to guide the selection and monitoring of treatment.
Optison represents a class of microbubbles with a shell formed by sonicating a solution of capsules filled with a perfluoropropane gas. The high molecular weight slows microbubble dissolution and prolongs the enhancement for several minutes. The human albumin-stabilized cavitation bubbles have a surface tension of 0.9 N/m and a surface dilatational viscosity 0.08 msP.

'August 06, 2001 Molecular Biosystems Inc., a subsidiary of Alliance Pharmaceutical Corp, announced the amendment of the Optison Product Rights Agreement (OPRA) dated May 9, 2000 with Mallinckrodt Inc, a unit of Tyco Healthcare. Optison, an intravenous ultrasound contrast agent, was developed by MBI and is being marketed by Mallinckrodt in the U.S. and Europe. Under the amended agreement, MBI will receive an immediate cash payment plus additional unspecified royalties for a two-year period. The amendment of OPRA coincides with an announcement by Nycomed Amersham Imaging that Nycomed and Mallinckrodt will terminate their joint commercialization and development agreement for ultrasound contrast agents, including Optison, effective Dec. 31, 2001. Effective Jan. 1, 2002, all selling and marketing activities will be resumed solely by Nycomed Amersham.'
Drug Information and Specification
RESEARCH NAME
FS069
INDICATION -
DEVELOPMENT STAGE
LVO -
For sale
APPLICATION
intravenous/oral
AlbuminN-acetyltryptophan,Caprylic acid
CHARGE
Slight Negative
Octafluoropropane
MICROBUBBLE SIZE
93% < 10μm
PRESENTATION
Five 3ml vials
STORAGE
Refrigerate 2-8 °C
PREPARATION
Hand agitate
DO NOT RELY ON THE INFORMATION PROVIDED HERE, THEY ARE
NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PACKAGE INSERT!
Distribution Information
TERRITORY
DISTRIBUTOR
USA, EU
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